Hello! Great Compilation! I'm watching all of you guys and your Videos are awesome! I want to say 'Thank you' to all Movie Reactors, for their work, to entertain us!
@matthewdunham16892 ай бұрын
Well said ❤
@louielouie222 ай бұрын
Lincoln opening scene reactions😮
@fionnmaccumhaill32572 ай бұрын
When he asks for more morphine, he knows it will lower his heart rate to a fatal level with his wound, but his wound is fatal also, so he's asking his friends to help him die easy.
@matthewdunham16892 ай бұрын
Exactly
@scottdarden30912 ай бұрын
He said OMG my liver. If you get shot in the liver, it better be in a hospital 😢
@AugustRushington2 ай бұрын
Thanks for that breakdown, Captain Obvious. Where would the world be without your narration?
@B355Y2 ай бұрын
@AugustRushington alot of people get confused about what's happening in that scene. Just because you understood it doesn't make you a genius. Arrogant 🌵
@AugustRushington2 ай бұрын
@@B355Y nobody is confused about what happens to your body when a shrapnel grenade detonates at your toes.
@actadiurna67332 ай бұрын
Only two reactors grasped the fact that asking for "more morphine" means he was asking them to kill him with a fatal second dosage. The military had a saying : "One is for the pain, two is for eternity".
@wickwire95602 ай бұрын
"EXACTLY "!
@dontworrybehappy808021 күн бұрын
Does it make a person not feel pain or a forceful overdose taking them out of their misery?
@johnjr75717 күн бұрын
@@dontworrybehappy8080both
@adamrasmussen18392 ай бұрын
Giovanni's acting in that scene is the pinnacle. Absolutely incredible.
@angelloj.diazdelaguila472Ай бұрын
I agree. This scene always makes me cry
@gingerty962825 күн бұрын
He is a great actor, so underrated.
@michaelmendoza65572 күн бұрын
He's always been a great yet underrated actor... Why? I'll never understand.....
@danjohnson29862 ай бұрын
The scene in the church where he talked about pretending to be asleep so he wouldn’t have to talk to his mother…and he didn’t know why he did that, to this scene where the last person he wishes he could see is his mother. Heartbreaking.
@JohnSample-h6n2 ай бұрын
Losing the medic is like losing the officer. It’s a huge hit on the moral and effectiveness of the unit.
@Mottleydude12 ай бұрын
“I wanna go home. I wanna go home. Momma, Momma, Mom…”. Last words of boys dying on battlefields throughout history. My mother refused to see this movie when it came out as she foresaw there would be a scene like this and she wouldn’t be able to handle it.😢
@budoshi-f2lАй бұрын
Understandable
@SovereignHyena29 күн бұрын
I really can understand why a mother can just not watch this.
@Mottleydude129 күн бұрын
@@SovereignHyena You’re right about that. When this Movie first came out I offered to take my parents to see the movie. My mother declined on the basis that in something’s for a Mother ignorance is bliss and she wouldn’t be able to handle watching young son’s dying. This scene would have traumatized the hell out of her and when he starts crying out for his Momma she would have completely lost it. So I was glad she declined to watch it.
@SovereignHyena29 күн бұрын
@@Mottleydude1 Exactly. Not because she does not care, but because she cares so immense that it would be a very huge heartbreak.
@synshadows2522 күн бұрын
Lot of men lied about their age, he might be 17 years old and still young/asking for his mom.
@ANativeWroteThisАй бұрын
Losing Wade hurt really bad. Wade was so cool. He was so gentle and intelligent. This is movie is damn near legendary.
@jeremyszczepanski2162 ай бұрын
Wade knew that, with a liver shot, he was going to die. He knew the morphine would cause his heart rate to plummet, but would also afford him an easier death. The saddest part is him crying for his mom, after the previous scene where he talked of his regret at pretending to be asleep when she came home from work.
@Thats_all_she_wrote_Dear_JohnАй бұрын
One is for pain...the second for eternity.
@ChrisVillagomez19 күн бұрын
I see a lot of people getting annoyed that the reactors don't know what morphine does to your heart, but I think that's a privilege, honestly, and one that shouldn't just be dismissed as "idiocy". They've never had to think about how much morphine a dying person can have. Hell, I've never actually had to but I still understand it. It's another example of this movie being so much more realistic than others, that it brings up such situations like when to give morphine to a man dying to grenade shrapnel
@JohnDoe-wt9ek14 күн бұрын
The entry wounds don't look like grenade shrapnel. It looks like he got the last desperate burst from the MG42 before the last cluster of grenades took the krauts out. The acorn sized hole in his back may be due to the fact that one of the rounds tumbled as it entered and exited his body, especially considering that the entry wounds are much smaller than the exit wounds mentioned by Miller during the "blood sweep".
@ChrisVillagomez14 күн бұрын
@@JohnDoe-wt9ek Ah I gotcha, I just thought it was that grenade that got thrown back that got Wade cause of how the camera focused on it for a sec
@phaethaya2 ай бұрын
When a full grown man goes to war, got shot and in hes last breaths was calling for his beloved mommy and wanna go home. That must be the worst senario for all the mothers who watch this movie. Truely one of the best movie ive seen. One of my collection.
@periechontology2 ай бұрын
Well is relationship with his mother was a previous theme in the movie.
@budoshi-f2lАй бұрын
Always the young that dies for the mistakes of the old.
@danielabarca31144 күн бұрын
Yeah. And watching this scene made me realize that a lot of these soldiers were basically still kids who were drafted at 18 or 19. It's so sad.
@sullyway512 ай бұрын
Remember ladies, Ryan was the last of four brothers left alive. Earlier in the war 5 brothers in the navy all died together when the USS Juneau sunk. Early in the 1940s Congress enacted the Sullivan Law following the death of five Sullivan brothers from Des Moines, Iowa. They were on the same ship when it was sunk in the Pacific. The law provided that members of an immediate family would not be placed together in harm's way. Wade was shredded by the grenade.
@colonelsanders196428 күн бұрын
And this movie is based loosely on the Niland brothers if I'm remembering correctly
@rottenkidd80422 ай бұрын
You can tell who the parents are when watching this scene. Those with children always break when Wade calls for his mama. Hurts me every time. But Rangers lead the way. Rah!!
@givepeasachance72 ай бұрын
I don't think you need to have children to feel devastated at that scene. Tbh I'm a bit concerned at some of these reactors that barely showed any emotion. How can this not move you. I understand people are different but they have reaction channels. People watch to laugh and cry and get scared with them.
@GunnyDeuce442 ай бұрын
The powder they were sprinkling on the blood was to help it clot faster to slow down the bleeding.
@brandonenglund75162 ай бұрын
We have become SO desensitized to death and war, we see it all the time in tv shows and movies but don’t really comprehend what it’s truly like to watch someone die before our eyes. We fail to remember these men were young, prob 18-22 most of them. I can’t even fathom going to war when I was 18, seeing what they saw. How many cried for their mothers. It’s movies like this that only to a small degree make you appreciate the absolute hell our grandparents went through. They were real men, strong men.
@jeffgadbury84442 ай бұрын
We always want our momma's in the end.
@danielthompson28949 күн бұрын
Now maybe some of you can understand why so many of us veterans honor the national anthem and the American flag as passionately as we do.
@narc3l16 күн бұрын
Experiencing first hand, hearing the tough guy call for his momma and wants to go home, or asking to deliver final message to his loved ones. Yeah it hits different.
@GoBuddieGoАй бұрын
This was one of the first movies to make me cry and I mean bawl my eyes out. I finally watched this movie when I was 19 (I’m in my 30’s now) and it just hurt knowing this is how some of these men lived out their final moments, with their brothers in arms, crying out to their mothers. Still one of my favorite movies of all time.
@CreeceMarquisАй бұрын
Out of all of the deaths in that movie, Wade's was still the most difficult to deal with. I've seen this movie a hundred times, and the 101st time will still have me tearing up on Wade's death.
@peterhanson3391Ай бұрын
The part when the American and the German were fighting hand to hand and the German stabbed the American was rough for me also. I just can't stand seeing that scene.
@michaelbishop1863Ай бұрын
WW2 Veterans say they watched this move and was asked after the movie. Was this movie real, and every Vet. Said yes. It was the most REAL than has ever been a movie of. Thank you Sir, for your hard work getting this movie out
@SoutheastTxАй бұрын
He's a medic this kid knew he was going to die. Getting hit in the liver and without getting proper medical help you'll bleed out. Being painful as well that extra morphine helped to ease the pain.
@davidjamesbanko93152 ай бұрын
Just think guys, this is a scene in a movie and its horrible. Just imagine what it was really like. My father was a marine in WW2 and fought in a little battle called Iwo Jima. Its one of the bloodiest battles with the largest loss of life for the marines in the war. My dad was hit by shrapnel after spending 10 days there. I can't even begin to imagine the horrors he saw in those 10 days. Any man or woman from all branches of the military who saw combat in any war, you have my empathy, my thanks, and my utmost respect. Everyone, no matter what your political views are, should do something for veterans at least once a year(it should be every day!) to show your appreciation. We dedicate whole months to people the lgbtq community because we think they're so "brave" for expressing themselves, but we don't do that for our combat veterans?!?! Its the sacrifices these veterans made that allow you to "be yourself" in the first place. Please support our veterans 🪖🇺🇸
@95jpaulАй бұрын
May is National Military Month, but most Republicans ignore that fact so they can gear up to spread their hatred the next month.
@13Jared2 ай бұрын
Yeah medics in war are just crazy but so admirable. Ive heard stories of medics taking multiple hits and as long as they can still move they just keep focused on helping their guys.
@DaveTingwaldd7 күн бұрын
It's definitely always the "mama, mama" that gets me everytime!
@gabrielwallace82152 ай бұрын
They can't leave a gun nest because it will kill other soldiers. Soldiers fight to win but also fight for one another.
@amehayami934Ай бұрын
My question is why is everyone hating on Ryan? What did he do? Other then having 3 OF HIS BROTHERS K.I.A. (killed in action) And his general doesn't want his mom to get a letter saying all of her kids are dead. But yes lets blame Ryan. Not Hitler for starting the damn war in the first place.
@scottball279623 күн бұрын
Ryan even says 'no Im not leaving my brothers (in arms)' he didnt want to leave the fight, where others would have jumped at the chance to leave
@zmanfire91623 күн бұрын
Before men call out to God or for their moms they call doc, we all take care of our medics and corpsmen
@jimmythundarrsdrumcoverser49213 күн бұрын
People who hate America and what it really stands for should watch this scene once a day as they complain about how terrible things are here today.....
@keetahbrough2 ай бұрын
8:40 no, no, it's not about 'waste' at all. Asking for 2 in a row will definitely kill him, which is why he's asked for it. His bro's know the seriousness of the moment, and pause. To make sure everyone knows and is on board. xo
@CarlosCabrera-m3w2 ай бұрын
La actuación de Giovanni Ribisi en está escena es magistral 👌
@wilee.coyote52984 сағат бұрын
My Dad was a WW2 Navy Corpsman in the Pacific. His first action was at Tarawa. I asked him if he had and used Morphine serets there. He said, "Yes". I asked him how many he used. He said, "all of them." BTW ‐ Everywhere he went on Tarawa, he had 3 big "six footer"Marines escort him. I asked him if they ever got hit. He said, "Yes". I then asked him what happened next. He said, "I'd patch him up, they'd get a replacement, and we'd move on"." Although the battle took 3 days, he said he was on Tarawa 2 weeks.
@scottAlexander-u8sАй бұрын
Remember, a lot of soldiers were of the ages from 19 to 24 during the war, upon death would call out for their mothers. A son’s first love is his mother. Sad, let’s never forget the sacrifices of these men. If that war had been lost, we’d all be speaking German. Remember that. Thank a soldier for their service and mean it. They are willing to lay down their lives so that you man have yours. I believe they do not fight for the hatred of the enemy but for those they love and left behind.
@yogihightower2 ай бұрын
The things men went through in both world wars is under appreciated and undervalued by a lot of people. This movie brought a snap shot of some of the horrors they went through. When H Clinton, the primary victims of war, were women, my rage reached levels that were new to me. Boys as young as 15 lied about their age to sign up to fight in Britain. When called upon men answer the call, i think women sometimes forget that.
@Vecchio244Ай бұрын
The great part of the scene is it shows the reality of war. It isn't about 21 gun salutes, but some 21 year old having his body ripped apart and dying at the hands of another kid because some old men and women told him to.
@scottball279623 күн бұрын
Back then...just old men 😂. But yea nowadays old men AND women
@bigsarge87952 ай бұрын
No matter how many times you watch this movie, this part is always sad.
@ChrisVillagomez19 күн бұрын
It always broke my heart that Riben and Uppham were the only survivors of the original squad. The 2 guys we have the least amount of backstory dialogue with, and also probably the 2 guys in that squad that were the most against being in that specific squad. They got their wish unfortunately :(
@winstonniles38432 ай бұрын
The handshaking comes from ptsd. Every decision made is on the cpt. Hes in charge. Its hard to order people to their deaths. Takes a tole on ya mentally
@jackray3332 ай бұрын
In WW2, most of the soldiers who were mortally wounded in combat, would ask for their mothers.
@meyer4652 ай бұрын
I have also read stories of the wounded laying on the Civil War battlefields calling for their mothers. I am sure this has happened as long as men have been at war throughout history.
@scottball279623 күн бұрын
Good Mothers care for their children, its a place of warmth, safety and comfort. In bad times a boy/man will always want his mother to look after him. Its primal.
@H8802 ай бұрын
The most terrible part is that Wade knew he was going to die and was "expected" so just requested morphine.
@JohnDoe-wt9ek14 күн бұрын
It wasn't until later in adulthood, before I joined the Army, that Wade was a dead man the moment they were rendering aid to him. When he freaked out over the placement of the gunshot wound to his abdomen, with an acorn sized whole for an exit wound, even if they managed to plug the holes and stop the external bleeding, he'd still hemorrhage internally and die from blood loss, and painfully as well considering that no nerve points were destroyed by the wounds. The second morphine dosage was to mercy kill him. Plain and simple. He was going out his own way, rather than letting the Germans have the satisfaction of killing him miserably. Mellish's response, as well as Reiben's, are both very much in tune with how any brother in arms would feel and react after everything they've gone through thus far, and have one surviving enemy combatant to really let loose upon... I understand Upham's disposition as to War Crimes. But I would choose to ignore it because, ultimately, other than the Captain or the Staff Sergeant, whose going to enforce it? Understandably so, they're on an important mission that cannot see them slowed by extra baggage or duties, holding a POW is not conducive to their mission. During the Airborne drops of this same Operation, there was no official order, but essentially an agreed upon rumor that no one was to take prisoners, and the reasoning was sound. Its not out of malicious, murderous intent. Taking prisoners would simply slow down operations and tie up troops desperately needed to achieve objectives, like Carentan and St Mere Eglise, two important inland towns that had crucial crossroads and logistical value to both sides of the fighting, thus, needing all available men to capture, secure, and hold those objectives (among many others). So if the German was executed by Jackson, Reiben and Mellish, Miller and Horvath would not have had much argument about it as, reasonably, though horrid, the logic is sound, especially when Reiben's own assessment of letting him go, being the worst case scenario, rang true at the end. Upham ended up eating his own words and realizing that just because you display humanity to your foe, doesn't always mean they're going to return humanity in kind...
@pustulio812 ай бұрын
You feel terrible for Wade, but, you almost feel worse for Tom Hanks character. He's having to watch his men die one-by-one as well as having to suffer the burden of being a good leader. Every victory belongs to his men, every failure belongs to him, and every life is his responsibility. From his perspective he didn't watch them die because they got shot, he watch them die because he failed to keep them alive.
@mikkifly2 ай бұрын
Can we just pause and appreciate the awesome acting in this scene🙏
@Alex-bh9uoАй бұрын
I dread to think how many lads died in ww2 screaming for their mums 😢
@thissailorja2 ай бұрын
One of things I noticed is that they kept washing off the sulpha powder. They should have left it. Put on pressure & tried to stop the bleeding.
@genghispecan2 ай бұрын
Meh, can ascribe it to the tension their characters are under but really, what would it have mattered with a hole through his liver? Even if he didn't bleed out, he'd be dead in few minutes and his character knew it, so did the CPT.
@JohnDoe-wt9ek14 күн бұрын
Stress and adrenaline is a hell of a mind altering aspect of the human body. And the training for combat life saving knowledge then, is not on par with the knowledge today. Hell, the typical First Aid Kit of a World War II combat infantryman was significantly smaller to your average First Aid Kit for today's soldier in comparison. The IFAK I had as part of my kit had enough equipment and material to deal with most immediate trauma and combat related wounds, as well as non-addictive pain killers to help keep the pain off, but without making me lose consciousness or overdosing...
@calm7132 ай бұрын
Easily THE BEST dying scene ever, he wins in all time best performance.
@marksmess1362 ай бұрын
One lady asked about the white powder, its Sulphur, used to immediately help fight infection. These actors are magnificent, giving the viewer the feeling of what real soldiers experienced every day during combat. These were truly America's Greatest Generation. I hope like, Captain Miller, we can live up to what so many died for.
@JohnDoe-wt9ek14 күн бұрын
Sulfa. Not sulphur. Just helping you out.
@jeremiahdelafuente423013 күн бұрын
When the medic asks for more morphine. He already knows
@wickwire95602 ай бұрын
...as a Solider of 21 years that has seen my Brother's fall and cry for there mother's, I know exactly how this feels... I lost 2 Brother's in Combat ! But I hope The Lsdies on here take away what Men are willing to do for them and for all the Country when we are called... I know Women can go now but Hey Dammit im old school I dont want to see one Women One Precious Angel on a Battlefield !!! Im retired from Military if I knew I could keep one Women outta Combat I would return ! Now there talking about Drafting Women it pisses me off ! God Bless my Brother's who went before me that Red in our Flag 🇺🇲 is there for all the Blood that's been shedd upon Battlefield's to keep Ol'Glory Flying over our Country !!! 🙏✝️🙏✝️🙏✝️🙏✝️🙏🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲 RIP Brother's!
@jindas42172 ай бұрын
The worst part is that Wade was so young 😢😢😢
@mikaelowe84302 ай бұрын
this made me cry to cause its an emotional scene
@rottenkidd80422 ай бұрын
Great reaction my friend. I like your content. Keep growing
@patrickgalle1277Ай бұрын
Wade died because he took the letter from Caparzo, and Captain Miller took it and died and later in the film Reiben took the letter and died later. The beginning of the movie where Ryan and family were in France for the war cemetery memorial it was only him and no one else . Sad...
@willthorson45432 ай бұрын
This happened to me. So in the theater i literally froze. And it brought back memories i thought. Were hidden. Hardest scene to watch of ahy film. Love the movie but only see it every once in a while.
@MrLato200013 күн бұрын
I find it interesting how many cry at this scene yet so many these days go "Men used to go to war to Die" Men Being Happy Ick!🤨
@unclelink2 ай бұрын
That letter was cursed.
@liotc4166Ай бұрын
Cette scène de guerre est très puissante émotionnellement,dure...
@matthewdunham16892 ай бұрын
Far too many good men died defeating the fascists. Never forget their sacrifice and what they died defending. Our freedoms. ❤ amen
@jimdandy81192 ай бұрын
Please. It was innocent, brainwashed boys on both sides slaughtering one another for nothing. Literally nothing good was accomplished by this war, the one before it, or any one since. The sooner everyone realizes this the better. The masses coming to this correct conclusion hopefully will prevent the next war.
@peterhanson3391Ай бұрын
And here we are having to fight it in the last country you would expect.
@mikehawk860929 күн бұрын
Easily the saddest scene of this whole movie, and there are some really sad scenes throughout this movie.
@marcushursl29315 күн бұрын
His the medic of the platoon. Thats why he knows he got shot on the liver.
@chuylopezflowers2 ай бұрын
The story Wade told about his mother and the time he was dying an calling for her, always gest me, every time I see this movie.😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
@SirMasonFighterАй бұрын
amazing acting in this scene
@vitorsaraiva504625 күн бұрын
the part that made most women break on the video was when he calls for his momma
@Zizzbiz2 ай бұрын
I've seen this movie several times and this is still one of the hardest scenes I ever watched and I've seen many a movie.
@76birdman22 күн бұрын
이 장면은 오히려 남성보다 여성에게 더 슬프게 느껴질 수 있다. 나에겐 군대를 다녀온 아들이 있다.(한국의 남성은 의무적으로 군대를 간다) 내 아내는 아들이 군대 간 이후부터 이 영화를 볼 때마다 눈물을 흘린다. 특히 웨이드가 죽을 때 '엄마'라고 말 할 땐 더더욱 그렇다. 아마도 아들이 엄마를 이승에서 마지막으로 불러 본다는 것이 얼마나 슬픈 일인지 느끼기 때문일 것이다. 나도 군대에서 2년 넘게 복무하면서 힘들 때면 언제나 '엄마'가 생각났다. 하지만 아들을 군대에 보낸 엄마의 마음은 더 견디기 어려웠을 것이다.
@frankmartinez48562 ай бұрын
Why did you make me watch this 😳you know these women, was going to make me cry 😵💫😖😭😬
@MrTech2262 ай бұрын
Everyone Matt Damon aka Private Ryan stated that both Hanks & Spielberg kept him away from other actors so they can actually hate (honest reactions) Ryan when they are doing this mission
@Greg-r5h2 ай бұрын
This what Men do while the Women go dancing. Dear John, ......
@puppylove12624 күн бұрын
This is the worst scene, makes me cry everytime. 😭
@UniversalLopes2 ай бұрын
"Who is it? Oh, it's this guy"
@5thhorseman55910 күн бұрын
Be sure to donate to a vetran service. It is the very minimum we can do for those who have gone thru this; WW2, Korea, Vietnam, Desert storm, Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, and now Ukraine and Israel. "One day wars will end, when man is no longer here"
@khaldro86442 ай бұрын
You should watch John Q. Starring Denzel Washington. That’s a really good movie 👍🏻
@ericules55582 ай бұрын
Lol it's so hard to feel the sadness with your expressions up in the corner, I know it's not meant to be funny just your a funny person naturally. Plus how odd it is to always have a sad scene of death and your head floating in the corner reacting lol. It's great.
@nomakgaming94582 ай бұрын
Yeah, if your livers shot you've got about 20 minutes(at best!) to live. Why the acting is terrific, he knew he was fucked.
@GabrielToledo912 ай бұрын
Según testimonios de sobrevivientes en distintas guerras, las últimas palabras de la mayoría de soldados antes de fallecer, son exactamente esas, siendo "mamá" o "Madre" la mas nombrada...
@HalconPeregrinoAzul24 күн бұрын
The saddest thing about this movie is when you realize that the famous soldier Ryan is Matt Damon... That actor has less charisma than a piece of paper
@jbwade56762 ай бұрын
I sad😢😢😢
@williamjones60312 ай бұрын
Love these man🤩
@goodmaninabadtime11720 сағат бұрын
Thank God for all the brave feminists protecting the world.
@donp19642 ай бұрын
You can see in the reaction, that most of the people reacting to this film are so emotionally beat down by this point in the movie.
@scotth33549 күн бұрын
How is it that none of these reviewers has ever seen Saving Private Ryan???
@wilee.coyote52984 сағат бұрын
Movie came out in 1998, before most of them were born. That, and women don't typically watch war movies.
@scotth33543 сағат бұрын
@@wilee.coyote5298 wow, thanks...
@zombiespongebob69032 ай бұрын
tough stuff
@aryn322 ай бұрын
Pretty awful what humans do to each other.
@MrSmokincodz28 күн бұрын
Let me guess- they all cry ?
@jardennis4ndАй бұрын
This movie was so realistic emotionally and cinematically that my PTSD was triggered. I even took my date straight home before I went home and cried.
@cullensmith1817Ай бұрын
Are you ok?
@jardennis4ndАй бұрын
@@cullensmith1817 Yes. To each their own. Just not good for me but I respect your need to be horrified.
@cullensmith1817Ай бұрын
@@jardennis4nd I'm also one with PTSD, but from domestic abuse. That beast is a monster with many heads. I just wanted to check in.
@jardennis4ndАй бұрын
@@cullensmith1817 thank you for your transparency. Most people don't speak of such things. I respect your honesty.
@sonofkarma5461Ай бұрын
Why was VKUNIA on the Thumbnail? She never even watched this movie (I really hope she Does some day)
@flyphishr2 ай бұрын
This part kills me…
@MJ194389 күн бұрын
Women, You are absolutely free to volunteer for this while we men wait at home. What's stopping you?
@Aiwendil99Ай бұрын
I also never understood why he wasn't held back with Upham. He's of no value in the assault and can be summoned up if someone gets hit. Just my opinion.
@conrradotorres465320 күн бұрын
They didn't have enough people to run a flank. The MG nest would've killed all of them. Someone had to bite the bullet on the left side, which was open field. Wade literally sacrificed himself to save the rest.
@Aiwendil9918 күн бұрын
@@conrradotorres4653 I thought Jackson said he would go left.
@willschoebel92562 ай бұрын
The medic should have stayed behind, too.
@harvey45122 ай бұрын
Yeah I agree from Pudgey as well. Crappy Decisions ahpuld have stayed with Upham including Jackson at the tower in final battle what they didn't notice
@rottenkidd80422 ай бұрын
You’ve never served. Every man who picks up a rifle is a soldier first. Their job comes second. You fight for the brother next to you. And you fight until you win or die. Not an insult. Just my humble opinion. Live long Live well my friend.
@harvey45122 ай бұрын
@rottenkidd8042 you haven't served too. Yes you fight to protect your brothers with rifle and country. However in reality being a big action Soilder like Millers squad is not how it works in WW2. Right vs Wrong is Black and White
@willschoebel92562 ай бұрын
@@rottenkidd8042 I don't know if you were saying that I have never served, you are wrong, US Army 1/54 Infantry BN attached to the 1st Armored Division "Old Ironsides" and our medic would have never been involved in this action.
@rottenkidd80422 ай бұрын
@@harvey4512 Actually, I did serve. 10 years. Communications. What’s more important than that when in a firefight? Gotta be quick, know your sh*t when it gets rough or people die. Better have that gear in the best possible working condition and test it ALL before you sign off on it
@marcoadan12 ай бұрын
"Ours is not to question why, ours is but to do and die."
@cullensmith1817Ай бұрын
La la la la la la la la la la. What the fuck does that mean, corporal? We're all supposed to die? Is that it?
@JohnDoe-wt9ek14 күн бұрын
@@cullensmith1817 Upham is talking about our duty as soldiers.
@cullensmith181714 күн бұрын
@@JohnDoe-wt9ek What the fuck does that mean? We're all suppose to die? Is that it?
@Alex-bh9uoАй бұрын
And look what we've done with the world. What a disgrace to their memories shame on all of us !!
@ITZ_REVIX15 күн бұрын
Didn’t he get hit by the grenade tho?
@jorgevaccari2374Ай бұрын
Eso es cierto mi padre murió llamando a su madre y padre
@RandyYalch-iq4sz2 ай бұрын
The horrors of war wrapped up in a 32 min clip.This is why its said innocence is the 1st thing lost by a soldier in combat!!!
@ThestomachloverАй бұрын
WADE!!! No wade no come on no😭 imagine if his last words were (Find Ryan) 14:14 I hate her she needs to shut up
@arraymac2272 ай бұрын
Centane's comments about what only the victim knows: well-meant, for sure.
@MrHws5mp2 ай бұрын
She's a nurse: she was reacting as if she was treating him in the ER.
@arraymac2272 ай бұрын
@@MrHws5mp Her comments, as expected from her profession.
@عدنان-س1ز2 ай бұрын
Taliban guy!? north east scream video
@markoconnor9952 ай бұрын
Losing the medic, who risked his life trying to save others, is gut wrenching.
@SIickTurtIe2 ай бұрын
need to do a compilation of reactors saying "IS THAT VIN DIESEL??!?!"